Fort Cavazos Officially Redesignated As Fort Hood  – IOTW Report

Fort Cavazos Officially Redesignated As Fort Hood 

ZH:
Fort Hood is back, soon after the Trump administration vowed to restore military bases which had name changes under the Biden administration due to Confederate linkages. 

What was briefly formerly called Fort Cavazos has been officially renamed Fort Hood, and even the gate signs have been quickly changed and updated.  more

9 Comments on Fort Cavazos Officially Redesignated As Fort Hood 

  1. AND JUST LIKE THAT, CONFEDERATE GENERAL JOHN BELL HOOD IS KICKED TO THE CURB

    LIKE HIM OR NOT, JBH WAS ONE TOUGH SOB, AS WERE SO MANY WHO WERE DISGRACED BECAUSE THEY WERE FROM THE SOUTHERN STATES

    I STILL HAVE A BEAUTIFUL PAINTING ON MY WALL OF STONEWALL JACKSON, UP EARLY, LEADING HIS MEN NORTH THRU THE EARLY MORNING SNOW OF SHENANDOAH VALLEY IN 1862, ON THE WAY TO MANY VICTORIES

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  2. A Drop in the Bucket

    A DILLEY MEME TEAM:

    CALIFORNIA FREEDOM

    https://x.com/CitizenFreePres/status/1935159314303386019

    Our Governors a Clown
    So’s the Mayor of LA
    Corruption at the top
    Arrogance on display
    Always assumed we would conform
    We are finally awake
    California Freedom
    Gets closer everyday. . .

    ^^^ Only one S in FreePres/ above
    Also,
    There are 19 numbers in the number that starts and ends in 19

    3451sts Drums and Fifes

    PS: Dilley was here with 412 and Quite Frank way back when.

    SUP DILLEY!!!

    4
  3. I bet cowardly liberals would love a fort named after Col. Custer, who’s lousy tactical moves got him and 256 cavalrymen killed and mutilated at Little Big Horn in 1876.

    Hate and bringing down America seems to be their objective.

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  4. Tim Buktu, there is a Fort Custer in Michigan where I grew up. It was named after that Col. Custer. It was established as a military training camp during World War I.

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  5. @Claudia

    Thanks for letting us know. But It’s not such a good name for a training center. Custer, overcome with bravura, underestimated his enemy, overestimated his own force, and did not do enough reconnaissance of the situation ahead.

    His wife lived on to the 1920’s and was interviewed about Custer and the battle before she died. She and the other wives did not make a big fuss about it when they found out about the disaster. “We were soldier’s wives”, she said.

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  6. Despite fighting for an economic system that needed to die, the Rebs had courage and were generally better soldiers than what the North had. They should be honored for that.

    I served at Ft. Benning and never thought twice about the name.

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